The movement to hold Bush and Co. accountable for torture and war crimes is gaining steam.

A Canadian Member of Parliament has declared that U.S. vice president Dick Cheney should be barred from entering the country.

Last week, Bush was forced to cancel a
fundraising appearance in Toronto, Canada at Tyndale University College
and Seminary, an evangelical Christian school. Students and faculty
members protested and petitioned to keep him away from their school.
Their petition said: “We believe that no amount of new money can justify
profiting from a former figurehead whose policies led to the murder of
thousands of innocent civilians.”

Bush assumed he would be welcomed by this university, but he wasn’t. Instead, they kept him out of Canada.

Days later, dozens of people, led by former
FBI special agent turned activist Coleen Rowley, met George Bush at a
Minnesota fundraiser with banners, signs reading “Wanted for torture”
and loud chants of “Arrest George Bush!” and “Shame!”

In an article about the protest, Rowley
posed the question, “When will Bush be ‘Pinocheted?’” She also asked:
“Is it proper to honor this war criminal who launched pre-emptive,
unjustified wars of aggression and ‘shock and awe’ that led to hundreds
of thousands of people killed, mostly civilian ‘collateral damage’ and
widespread destruction in the Middle East?”

Because of this broad-based and growing
movement for accountability and justice, Bush’s world is getting
smaller. He is canceling more and more events and is being dogged by
passionate protests wherever he goes.

The same is true for Dick Cheney.

Following protests in Orange County, New
York and Chicago, Cheney was met by another demonstration in the most
improbable of places, conservative Simi Valley, Calif. at a book signing
in the Ronald Reagan Library. Cheney thought he would evade protest
here, but he couldn’t. The movement against torture was on to him.
Dozens of protesters outside the venue denounced Cheney’s complicity in
torture and demanded indictment for his crimes.

This is unprecedented. Former top U.S.
officials are unable to travel in their own country without being
challenged by our movement.

Let’s keep up the pressure. More and more
people are joining the ranks of our movement and demanding indictment
for Bush, Cheney and their gang.

We need your support to make this movement
even bigger and stronger. IndictBushNow is initiating and joining
protests wherever Bush and Co. travel. Your donation today will help us
keep up the momentum.